Primary succession of algal community structure in desert soil


Autoria(s): HU Chunxiang; LIU Yongding
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

The microbiotic crust study is among new focuses in investigating on the desertification control. Based on determination of algal crusts with different successive ages (4-, 8-, 17-, 34-, 42-year-old) and unconsolidated sand in the desert area, species composition and clustering analyses were carried out in this study. Results on successional orientation revealed that (1) the abundance of Cyanophyta, specially of Scytonema javanicum gradually decreased; (2) the abundance of Chlorophyta, Bacillariophyta and a species of Cyanophyta, Phormidium tenue increased; (3) the biodiversity increased gradually with the community succession; and (4) biomass of microalgae increased at the early stage, but decreased at the later stage due to the abundance of lichens and mosses. But, the speed of natural succession was so slow that the community-building species was still the first dominant species after 42 years, except that its dominant degree decreased just slightly. However, successive speed and trend were affected by water, vegetation coverage, terrain, time and soil physico-chemical properties as well, especially Mn content in the soil appeared to have a threshold effect.

Identificador

http://ir.ihb.ac.cn/handle/152342/9664

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/59345

Fonte

HU Chunxiang; LIU Yongding.Primary succession of algal community structure in desert soil,ACTA BOTANICA SINICA,2003,45(8):917-924

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Plant Sciences #desert soil #algae #community structure #primary succession
Tipo

期刊论文